ROY WARD JR.: Passionate about the Tigers
ROY WARD JR.: Passionate about the Tigers
By David Lazenby
The Cullman Times
Cullman County is full of Tiger fans, but most are not as enthusiastic about Auburn football as Roy Ward Jr.
The former president of The Cullman County Auburn Club, whose black Dodge Intrepid bares a tag with the phrase “AUBURN #1,” has a wall in his living room that is a personal shrine to his pigskin passion that began when Ward became a fan at 5.
“My mother and uncle would go to the Auburn games played at Birmingham and they would bring me shakers,” said Ward before remembering, “They didn’t have shakers back then.”
They did, however, have “pinups” purchased for Ward, who used the souvenirs to decorate his room.
Today, the 65-year-old has an Auburn emblem made by his late mother, Evelyn Ward, using crochet that is a centerpiece of Ward’s wall of War Eagle memorabilia.
One thing the former financial office manager hasn’t forgotten are the plays that have become part of the collective consciousness of longtime Tiger fans. The wall serves as a daily reminder of those celebrated moments that turned collegiate athletes into Plains legends.
Ward’s voice goes up a notch when he remembers “The Sack Game,” pointing to a photo in which a few Big Blue defenders recognizable only by their numbers stand over former Alabama quarterback Brody Croyle.
Other photos are captured moments of Tiger lore, including the “Punt Bama Punt” game. And a memorable game in which sports legend Bo Jackson vaulted over his less legendary playmates. A personal favorite for Ward is a photo of himself with Ralph “Shug” Jordan, the Tigers’ answer to Paul “Bear” Bryant. Ward and Jordan met in 1973.
You Can’t Win
Of course, the record shows they weren’t all good days at Jordan-Hare stadium, particularly the era sandwiched between the university’s two Heisman trophy winners, quarterback Pat Sullivan who won in 1971, and Jackson, who scored the award named after former AU coach John Heisman in 1985.
Tags: 2, pinups
April 2nd, 2008 at 6:07 pm
Got it. Missed the tongue and the cheek.
April 2nd, 2008 at 6:57 pm
I’d second Teksavvy. In addition to the lower monthly cost, they don’t block any ports, so if you’re into accessing your home pc from work (e.g. remote desktop, web server, squeezebox music library, etc) you’re set!
April 2nd, 2008 at 7:48 pm
Or rather, lots of people on the Internet care about net neutrality.
April 2nd, 2008 at 8:38 pm
here’s an alexa chart showing thestar.com yesterday being bigger than the globe or canada.com. I accept that canada.com has been bigger, but it’s 9 newspaper sites and global television all combined, so thestar is bigger than any individual Canwest owned newspaper by far.http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details/instantaction.com?site0=thestar.com&site1=theglobeandmail.com&site2=canada.com&y=r&z=3&h=300&w=610&u%5B%5D=thestar.com&u%5B%5D=theglobeandmail.com&u%5B%5D=canada.com&x=2008-04-02T18%3A56%3A07.000Z&check=www.alexa.com&signature=jIAgTiTytyqx80EajXGQnilJZu4%3D&range=7d&size=Medium
April 2nd, 2008 at 9:29 pm
Are you suggesting there might be selection bias going on here?
April 2nd, 2008 at 10:19 pm
I’m always forgetting my tags.
April 2nd, 2008 at 11:10 pm
Er, what’s meant by “biggest”, anyway? Most stories? Most popular? I find it hard to believe that The Star is more popular than Canada.com. Maybe the submitter has some stats?
April 3rd, 2008 at 12:01 am
Shaw has been closing port 25 and generally fucking around with Bittorrent.
April 3rd, 2008 at 12:51 am
Think like a Torontonian. Clearly, since Toronto IS Canada, the Toronto Star IS Canada’s national newspaper.
April 3rd, 2008 at 1:42 am
This is the unfortunate thing for a while the smaller service providers were your best choice or Sympatico in a distant second. Now because of what Bell is doing I’m not to sure. I don’t know which is worse Rogers or Sympatico. I do have to commend Rogers though I got fed up with bells bad Indian customer service and so I wanted to switch to Rogers. I called up rogers asking them If they throttled bittorrents, and they admitted to me that they do. I commend them from being honest about it at the time.
April 3rd, 2008 at 2:32 am
Shaw only exists in areas that Rogers doesn’t. Same with Telus.The cable companies Shaw & Rogers share most of the Toronto area. The phone companies Telus & Bell don’t really compete with each other since Telus is BC, Alberta (maybe other provinces) main carrier. Bell covers Ontario.From the outside it looks like we have choice, but in reality, the companies seem to be careful to not step on each other’s territories.
April 3rd, 2008 at 3:23 am
Actually, I was just trying to figure out how to write a headline that would get votes on reddit by appealing to its sensationalist, pro-internet, anti-big-business and mispelling sympathetic masses. The Star is the biggest newspaper in Canada and has a very decent site. I assume their website attracts more visitors than any other newspaper’s also. CBC and Canada.com aren’t a newspaper site for those questioning if those are bigger.
April 3rd, 2008 at 4:13 am
The toronto star is not canadas biggest newspaper. That would be the globe and mail. The toronto star isnt even a national paper!
April 3rd, 2008 at 5:04 am
Was anyone else trying to read “mot” (from the headline) as a French word?